POLS 296

Spring 2003

Jan Feldman

511 Old Mill

X64202

Office Hours: TTH 1:50-3:30 or by appt.

Theories of Citizenship

The idea of citizenship holds a prominent place in the history of Western political thought. It goes to the heart of justice in a community, namely the relationship between the individual and the collective, and the distribution of the benefits and burdens of membership. How we think about the normative dimension of citizenship has changed over time. Its roots are in Athens and Rome and the long evolution from tribal to civic states. The idea of citizenship is transformed by the Enlightenment and evolved further in the face of later political and economic struggles. The contemporary revival of interest in the concept of citizenship is a response to globalization, the formation of newly independent states in the wake of the disintegration of the Soviet Bloc, the rise of nationalist and sub-national movements, demands for political recognition by minorities, and demographic forces, including dramatic shifts in population as the result of immigration.

States are scrambling to deal with tensions created by increasingly complex societies. Citizenship is seen as one of the major devices for countering the centrifugal forces created by pluralism. Can citizenship provide the integument needed to maintain political unity in the face of competing demands on our loyalty and competing sources of identity such as: ethnicity, race, gender, religion, and class? What are the special requirements of democratic citizenship? Are we producing citizens of sufficient dedication and competence to keep democratic political institutions afloat? This seminar will explore the concept of citizenship, its historical development, and the special challenges of citizenship in modern, multicultural societies.

Course requirements:

This is a seminar in which reading and participation are central. You will be asked to submit an outline and short analysis of each reading prior to the class to which it pertains. In addition, there will be a research project to be presented at the end of term.

The four books for the course may be purchased at the Bookstore. The additional readings, in the form of articles, will be available on electronic reserve under my name, the course number and title.

Books:

Beiner, Ronald, Ed. Theorizing Citizenship

Shafir, Gershon, Ed., The Citizenship Debates

Faulks, Keith, Citizenship

Nussbaum, Martha, Ed., For Love of Country

I. The Concept of Citizenship

Faulks, Ch. 1 The Idea of Citizenship

Dauenhauer, Bernard, Ch. 2.The Twentieth Century Debate

Castles and Davidson, Ch. 1. The Crisis of Citizenship

Ch. 2. Theories of Citizenship

In Beiner: Ch. 3 George Armstrong Kelly, Who Needs a Theory of Citizenship?

In Shafir, Ch. 1 Gershon Shafir, The Evolving Tradition of Citizenship

II. The Evolution of Citizenship from the Greeks and Romans through the medieval city -state to the nation-state.

Gross, Feliks Ch. 1 The Way it Began

Ch. 2 Roots of Citizenship: Athens and Rome

In Beiner: Ch. 1 JGA Pocock, The Ideal of Citizenship since Classical Times.

In Shafir: Ch. 3 Max Weber, Citizenship in Ancient and Medieval Cities

Gross, Feliks, Ch. 4 Unfolding of Democratic Citizenship

In Faulks, Ch. 2 Citizenship and the Nation State

Dagger, Richard, Ch. 6 Citizenship and the General Will

In Shafir Ch. 4 John Rawls, Justice as Fairness in the Liberal Polity

The Critique of Liberal Citizenship: Communitarians and Civic Republicans

Civic Virtue and Republican Models:

Faulks, Ch. 3 Rights and Responsibilities

In Shafir: Ch. 5 Adrian Oldfield Citizenship and Community

Castles and Davidson: Ch. 5 Being a Citizen

Dagger, Richard: Ch. 11 Difference, Excellence and Republican Liberalism

Educating Competent Citizens:

Dauenhauer, Bernard, Ch. 7 Education and Competent Citizenship

Dagger, Richard, Ch. 7 and Ch. 8: Encouraging Citizenship; Education, Autonomy and

Civic Virtue

Kymlicka, Will, Ch. 16 Education for Citizenship

Anti-virtues:

In Beiner, Ch. 4 Richard Flathman Citizenship and Authority

III. Citizenship and Identity: class, culture, ethnicity, race, religion, sexual orientation, gender or "differentiated citizenship"

Social Class:

Karl Marx, On the Jewish Question

In Shafir: Ch. 6 T.H. Marshall Citizenship and Social Class

Faulks; Ch. 4 Pluralism and Difference

Isin and Wood Ch. 2 Modern Citizenship: Civil, Political, and Social

In Beiner: Ch. 5 Michael Walzer, The Civil Society Argument

Citizenship in a Multi-ethnic State

Ch. 6 Iris Marion Young Polity and Group Difference

In Shafir Ch. 9 Will Kymlicka Multicultural Citizenship

Gender and Citizenship:

In Shafir: Ch. 11 Kathleen Jones, Citizenship in a Woman-Friendly Polity

Isin and Wood: Ch. 4 Sexual Citizenship: Identities of Gender and Sexuality

Religious Citizens

Alan Wolfe, Civil Religion Revisited

Ronald Thiemann Public Religion

Michael McConnell Believers as Equal Citizens

Patriotism vs. Cosmopolitanism: Is Love of Country a Virtue?

In Nussbaum, Martha, Ed. For Love of Country

Nussbaum, Patriotism and Cosmopolitanism

Barber, Constitutional Faith

Glazer, Limits of Loyalty

Gutmann, Democratic Citizenship

Himmelfarb, The Illusion of Cosmopolitanism

Sen, Humanity and Citizenship

Taylor, Why Democracy needs Patriotism

Walzer, Spheres of Affection

In Beiner, Ch. 7 Alasdair MacIntyre Is Patriotism a Virtue?

Citizenship in a Postmodern, Global World

Isin and Wood, Ch. 7 Radical Citizenship

Faulks, Ch. 6 Citizenship in a Global Age

Castles and Davidson, Ch. 7 The End of National Belonging

In Beiner, Ch. 8 Joseph Carens, Aliens and Citizens: The Case for Open Borders

Student Presentations